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That is the chiller I saw in the factory. I wasn't supposed to notice it. I asked Dave and Tom what was up with the new bench grinder, they said they would have to kill me if they told me.

Saw a chiller at the york factory in San Antonio in 2008. The compressor was on the chiller like a YK. but had an impeller on each end of the motor like a double ender. They wouldn't talk about it either. I was on a tour with other sales guys, it surprised them that a couple of us (ex techs) noticed it.

Looks interesting, tonnage range is limited like the York machine. Be real interested to see the numbers though...
Here is a link to Trane's earlier thoughts on maglev technology.http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?v=x0MrD...ature%3Drelmfu
Listen to them talk about open drive motors and maglev technology!

Well, this new machine looks cool and all, but do they have any long term solution as far as refrigerant goes? R-11 is still readily available 20 years after production ended. R-123 will probably be the same, but when the average life span of a water cooled centrifugal chiller is 20-30 years, who is going to buy a new machine that uses an obsolete refrigerant as we get closer to 2020? It'd be great if they could come up with some new HFC low pressure refrigerant that could be used in this and the other centravacs going forward. Trane's argument against high pressure has always been "what's more environmentally friendly than a refrigerant that stays inside the chiller?" If they are going to move to high pressure in the future, are they going to be able to do it with a design like this? How are they going to sell something that they've spent the last 20 years trash-talking?

Again, I think the S-Series will be awesome and will move the centravac line out of the stone age and make it more of a force in the retro/replacement market. However, I think these are all valid questions that have already been asked for a long time, and will continue to be until they offer up something really new.

Here's a research paper from Purdue University dating to 1996 that refers to an "HFC-LVP" and "HFOC-LVP" which are both "confidential and proprietary and experimental HFC low vapor pressure refrigerants" I wonder who was behind these? York was still in the low-pressure biz then.